Best News Series

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Collegian HUNDREDS TURN OUT FOR LACC GALA

LACC WEATHER FORECAST WEDNESDAY

72/57

THURSDAY

74/58

FRIDAY

74/61

SATURDAY

74/62

SUNDAY

73/60

Wednesday, October 12, 2016 Volume 177 Number 2

NEWS BRIEFS ComPileD By yoseliN Flores

Los Angeles Press Club to Host Marijuana Debate L.A. Times culture and politics columnist Robin Abcarian questions both sides of the controversial Proposition 64 debate. Will marijuana be a cash crop for L.A. and increase revenue for our schools, or will passage of the measure lead to increased drug use and DUI’s? Be an informed voter. Join the discussion at the L.A. Press Club on Thursday, Oct. 13. Reception starts at 6:30 p.m. Debate starts at 7 p.m., at 4773 Hollywood Blvd., L.A., 90027. The event and parking are free to the public, but RSVP is a must. For more information, email info@lapressclub.org.

CSUN Representative to Visit Campus Students interested in transferring to California State University Northridge will have the opportunity to meet one-on-one with a CSUN representative. Appointments can be made at the Transfer Center, AD 109. For more information, call (323) 9534000, ext. 2215.

Free Flu Shots Offered to City Students The Health and Wellness Center is providing free flu shots. Vaccines are given on a first come, first served basis Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday from 8:30 a.m. to noon. Students must show a current student ID and class schedule.

Fall Classic Hiring Spree Returns to LACC City College is hosting its fourth annual Fall Classic Hiring Spree. The event is open to all members of the community and will take place on Friday, Oct. 21 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Those interested in attending are advised to dress professionally and bring copies of their resume.

SEE PAGE 10

Los Angeles

The Voice of Los Angeles City College Since 1929

Disabled Students: Campus Unsafe for Blind and the Visually Impaired

Four Los Angeles City College students with disabilities filed lawsuits against the LACCD this year within a four-month period between February and May. Three of the students in the lawsuit identified as visually impaired. The suits are filed separately through the Barbosa Group and claim the district violated their rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Other charges in the lawsuit accuse the district of violating the California Educational Code and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. By CliNToN CameroN

M

ost students at Los Angeles City College take their access to clearly marked emergency routes, campus maps, classroom and building locations, readable textbooks and classroom handouts for granted. But for many of the visually impaired, getting around campus presents a challenge, especially amid the new construction projects. Access to basic instructional materials, textbooks and information from classroom lectures has also become a challenge for students with disabilities according

PHOTO BY ANWAR TORRES/COLLEGIAN

to lawsuits filed by Wail Alhidir, Yokashammel Dunn, Roy Payan, and Portia Mason. Alhidir walks past the sculpture in LACC’s Quad on a Wednesday afternoon. In one hand he carries a white cane. His attorney Patri-

cia Barbosa hangs on to his other arm as they discuss how millions of dollars have been spent on campus construction. Still, the school lacks signage in some buildings to help visually impaired students identify class-

By maTThew oliver

All actively enrolled students at LACC are eligible for Wolfram Mathematica and Alpha Pro free of charge. The software allows students to upload data and images for analysis. Students can install Mathematica and Alpha Pro by visiting http:// www.lacitycollege.edu/resource/ downloads/mathematica.html.

At least two students were left screaming when a man exposed himself and ejaculated onto a table on the third floor in the Martin Luther King Library on Sunday, Sept. 18, 2016. Police report the man was wearing a black shirt with a white logo and dark colored shoes. He is 5’ 7” and weighs about 170 pounds. He was unshaven at the time of the incident. “I heard a woman screaming

Clinic Helps with CSU Admission Process

INDEX Opinion & Editorial News Election 2016 Campus Life Photo Focus

2-3 4 5 6-7 10

Alhidir’s suit accuses the district of violating more than a half -dozen California codes and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. SEE DISABLED STUDENTS PAGE 4

Campus Police Search for Indecent Exposure Suspect

Free Wolfram Mathematica and Alpha Pro Available to LACC Students

Students applying to a Cal State University for fall 2017 admission may attend an application clinic for a page-by-page review of the online application. Students who would like to participate can begin the application at csumentor.edu prior to the session, and should also bring a printed copy of their unofficial transcripts from all colleges attended. The application clinic begins on Friday, Oct. 14 from 10:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m., and Monday, Oct. 17 from 3-4 p.m. at the Library Room, 123A. Students should RSVP by contacting the Transfer Center AD 109, (323) 953-4000, ext. 2215.

rooms. Physical barriers such as sandbags block walking paths on campus making travel an extra challenge for the blind. “We’ve done everything we’re supposed to,” Barbosa said. “That’s why we’re suing.”

PHOTO BY EVE MORENO/COLLEGIAN

CONSTRUCTION IMPROVES COLLEGE APPEARANCE, REMAINS INCOMPLETE By william Torres Renovation and construction are still a big part of the City landscape. Holmes Hall will be completed by the end of October. Student Services is slated for November. Construction is pending Da Vinci Hall. Funding for the project was due to a Bond measure the city voted on 15 years ago. The new construction is anticipated to greatly improve the col-

lege campus. Barbara Vasquez, the chair of the library department has been working in the MLK Library for eight years. There has been construction happening near the library during that time. “As far as the construction, I’m obviously frustrated like everyone else,” Vasquez said. “We all thought it was going to be done years ago.” Once the Metro issues are resolved, work will resume. It could

take weeks however, if not months to start the construction. “From my understanding for the last two or three years, one of the biggest holdups is the Metro, meaning the subway, not the bus, brings up the problem,” Vasquez said. Diana Johnson, a project director with Build LACCD is fully aware of the delays happening with the Red Line Station. SEE CONSTRUCTION PAGE 4

hysterically, that’s when I went to check it out,” said Bilawal Singh Thakar, a library assistant who was working and rushed up the stairs. He says he caught a glimpse of a black man wearing a beanie with a white phone pressed against his face walking briskly toward the exit. “I saw him leaving and the two girls in the room pointed him out,” Thakar said. “I was scared. You don’t know what to expect, he SEE INDECENT EXPOSURE PAGE 4

Piano of Jamaitis Goes Silent, but Legacy Begins By lavielle hiBBerT Al Jamaitis was a man of many wonders who was a prominent jazz pianist for the Jazz Horizons, and toured most of his life across the globe. He will be best remembered as the pianist for the dance department for 35 years at Los Angeles City College. He died mid August at the age of 60. In the ‘70s, he moved to California to work at the studios, according to retired dance professor Maria Reisch. She told the Collegian he was called upon to just “fill in” at City for the piano player on leave. At that time, he was playing at a church near LAX. Reisch said it was O.C. Smith’s church, which was called City of Angels. “I did nothing but play really

strictly the most hardcore gospel you’d ever heard, they would always say, ‘Hey man, the token’s here!,’ It was a ball,” Reisch said of her late co-worker by telephone to the Collegian. SEE AL JAMAITIS PAGE 4


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